Thursday, September 8, 2022

Dragonflies at the Toga

  
Dragonfly pattern by Jen Daly

This is the dragonfly pattern I will be teaching at the Virtual River Rat TOGA on September 17th. I will be teaching the 6.5" block so it is the same size as a block exchange block.  Those of you who are members of TreadleOn know what I am talking about.

 
I used a Kona black for the body and a lovely pale blue Fossil Fern for the background. The wings are a Maywood Studio fabric called Razzle Dazzle.  I couldn't resist it at a Quilt Market in Kansas City from the early 2000's.  
Here is a close up.

Any fabric will work for the wings.  Batiks and shiny fabrics would be my choice. I like shiny things.  It is your dragonfly.  Use the fabrics YOU like.  Perhaps you will notice that I changed it a bit.  My wings are wonky.  

Here is a simplified cutting list for the 6.5” (unfinished) dragonfly block

  • Background fabric
  • 2- 3.25 x 3.5 rectangles
  • 1- About a 6” square to be sub-cut later during class.
  • Dragonfly wing fabric
  • 2- 2 x 3.25 rectangles
  • 2- 2 x 3.25 rectangles.  (2 fabrics are optional) You can make all 4 wings from the same fabric if you wish.
  • Dragonfly body fabric
  • 1- 1” x 6.25” rectangle.


I hope I will see you at the Virtual River Rat Toga this year.  Here is the link to register for the River Rat Toga.  This class is just one of many being offered.


Hugs,
Nancy
  


 

Wednesday, August 24, 2022

Another scrappy quilt!

Hello sisters!

This quilt has a designer! Unlike many of my recent quilts.  Of course I am changing it.  

I am modifying a Bonnie Hunter pattern called Kismet.  Her leader and ender project last year was the cats cradle block.  She called it fish school and I can see why.  You can see it in her free patterns tab at Quiltville.com.

This year she used those blocks in her quilt Kismet

The Fish School block

The fish blocks were so much fun for me that I was looking in all my premade scraps for half square triangles.  Bonnies were quite small but I made my fish to finish at 6" so I could use them as block exchange blocks for Treadle-On Toga block exchanges.  So my half square triangles were 3.5 unfinished.

I used quite a few HST's from my friend Esther Bring who has passed on.  It is fun to see them finally being used.  Friends have commented that the colors do not look my normal very bright colors.  Blame Esther!

This is the first toss up on the design wall.

I had both the scrappy crumb blocks and the large light HST's leftover from another project so I decided to use them instead of the string blocks Bonnie used                       

Next I decided the dark crumbs blocks made everything too dark.

I had a few light crumb blocks leftover from the same quilt that I snuck the other blocks from so I put them in place. You might notice that one of the light blocks in this picture is just a plain square.  I only had three crumb blocks on hand. I really liked that look better so I had to make some more light crumb blocks.  They are too much fun to make.  But messy in the quilt room!  LOL.

And now I had to make a lot more fish!

As you can see I prefer to make my half square triangles eight at a time! It is so fast that way!

Friday, July 29, 2022

Hollyhocks

I know you have hollyhocks in your garden, Nancy. I have just successfully moved mine to the front of my house which makes the front look So Much Better. My garden plans move at a glacial pace, and this has been a long time coming.

Monday, July 4, 2022

J. D. Salinger's popcorn salt recipe

I was listening to NPR one day several months ago and they were talking about J. D. Salinger and at the end of the bit they gave his popcorn salt recipe. Since I was driving I couldn't write it down but later I looked it up and listened to my very first podcast.  It was on Christopher Kimball's  Milk Street.  

If I was a true blogger I would write all sorts of lovely prose about it and post a fancy picture.  But I am not so here is the recipe.  

 1/4 Cup Diamond Crystal Kosher salt, 

4 t. garlic powder,  

2 t. onion powder, 

2 t. Curry (I used Penzy's NOW Curry),  

2 t. paprika,  

2 t. marjoram,  

2 t. dill.

The directions were to grind it with a mortar and pestle but I don't think I remembered that.

It is very good on popcorn.  

However I have recently been using it on all sorts of things.  Eggs, Polenta, mashed potatoes.  It is a good blend. I wonder what I will use it on next!

Now I want some popcorn!

Hugs,
Nancy


Sunday, March 20, 2022

Embroidery on my new (to me) Willcox and Gibbs handcrank.

My first piece sewn with the Willcox and Gibbs.
I did it!

I ordered an antique sewing machine on the internet.  I have heard all the horror stories but Wolfegang's Collectibles has a sterling reputation and I felt safe.

I have been wanting a Willcox and Gibbs handcrank chain stitch machine for a while. When I saw Michael had a selection I was first in line.  

This is what the box looked like when I picked it up at the post office.

The box with the machine in it.

And this is what it looked like after I opened it.

Really?  There is a sewing machine in there?

I started removing the grey stuff. 
It is fairly stiff foam.  Lots and lots of foam.

Eventually I could access the box the machine was in. It was wrapped tightly with cling wrap.
Cling wrapped box. 
I was excited to open it.  When I did it found....
MORE FOAM!

This was what was in it.  I had to remove one piece to even see the machine.  
Anybody need some foam?

Eventually, with much careful foam removal, I uncovered this little beauty.
         More cling wrap!

And then I got it out.  It was in there very tight!  I put the spool holder and the crank on. They had been removed (and cling wrapped) for safe shipping.  Then I admired it greatly.
So pretty!

I had to clean and polish it up and oil it a lot and play with it a little.  It is working perfectly, the tension is correct and I am thrilled to have it.

So, anyone want some foam?


Hugs,
Nancy







The Lunch Box mayonnaise recipe

The Lunch Box book

Mary makes her own mayonnaise.  She has been coaching me on making it also.  I've made it once.

I wanted to share this recipe I found in a 1946 cookbook.  I think I will try this recipe next time. There isn't a lot of variation in the recipes but I tend to get "creative" and need to dial it back a little. 

This is the cover page of the book.   Maybe I should read more of it.  I just found the mayo recipe when the book opened to that page as I was moving it.

1946.  Only 76 years old.

And here is the recipe.

I'll probably lower the sodium.

I will continue to use Mary's method with an immersion blender and a narrow glass jar.  It was super easy and fast.  Lemon juice is a must.

Hugs,
Nancy



Thursday, February 17, 2022

Playing with a miniature block

The finished 5" block

A friend challenged several of us with a tiny little block that she found somewhere online. I don't know where so can't credit the quilter.

The Challenge

I figured the small blocks finished at an inch.  Since I was bored with the Bonnie Hunter Mystery Quilt I was supposed to be sewing it looked like a fun challenge.  I already had most of the quarter square units waiting for me to do something with them, so I dug them out.

The tiny quarter square units cut down to 1.25 inches.

I didn't want to work with block as small as one half inch finished so I decided to make them one quarter inch larger. I had to trim the already made quarter square triangles down to 1.25 inches. That was no problem.  (Some were 1.5" and some were 1.75".)  

They were all made with beautiful hand dyed Cherrywood fabric that another friend had passed on to me when she finished cutting for a quilt.

pinwheel layout

As I worked on the layout  I decided to make as many pinwheels as I could without sewing any more color combo's.  (That was three pinwheels.)

sewing on my Singer 99K handcrank.

So I sewed them together and thought they were beautiful 
My initial 16 patch.

However it seemed very  unfinished and small.  It was 3.5 inches.  

It's too small.

I had more of the Cherrywood fabrics so I chose four of the colors and did a square in a square block design.  That made it finish at 5".  That was much better.

Looking for backing and binding

I was happy with this size and searched for a fabric for backing.  I think I found the perfect fabric and got to work making a sandwich and quilting the tiny thing.  

I drew the quilt design on the top with Clover's water erasable blue marker.  That was a mistake.  When I was done quilting I spritzed the piece with water to make the lines go away and discovered I used too much water.  Some of the fabric dye bled into the yellow fabric.

I was not a happy camper.

I put on the binding anyway and tried to decide what to do.

After brooding over it for a day I decided that I might be able to hide the worst of the bleeding with an embroidery "design element."  Thus you have the little floral accents at the start of the quilted flower.

It was fun to make this little block. However I do not need to make any more right now.  I am back to working on the Bonnie Hunter Mystery Quilt.

Hugs,

Nancy


Saturday, January 29, 2022

Too Cold for TOGA

This is the second virtual Too Cold for TOGA that TreadleOn has hosted. It was a two day event with only one class on Friday evening for machine maintenance.  That was taught by our brave leader Mea Clift.  

There were two classes on Saturday January 29. I taught the color class and Helen Howes of Helen Howes Textiles taught an amazing class on quilted postcards.  She taught this class using her darling pattern called Counter-Change Cats.  It is available as an e-pattern from her at helen@helenhowestextiles.co.uk

Here are my cats.  One quilted and one waiting to be quilted. Then I trim them to size, back them and put the postcard info on the back.  I loved the class.  Of course I love cats so it was a given.  

My color class was fun too.  I had the devil of a time deciding how to teach it until Dawn Beckwell herded me into deciding that the best would be actually working through how I choose colors for a quilt. We used a picture of a monarch butterfly on Zinnias that I had taken in my garden as the inspiration. 

I had a huge pile of fabrics that were possibilities and as a group we worked through them and came up with a lovely set of fabric.  I am tempted to actually use the fabrics to make something.  

Don't you think we did a great job?

Hugs,

Nancy

Thursday, January 13, 2022

Where do we put the snow?

My sister-in-law lives in a high rise in Chicago a block off of Lake Michigan. We were Zooming the other night and I was talking about the snow blower I had bought my husband. I told her it was supposed to be able to blow the snow 40 feet.

This blew her city mind. "Where" she wanted to know "do you put all that snow?"

I tried to explain to her about the space on a farm in North Dakota. She didn't seem to be able to comprehend the fact that we didn't have a house 15 feet from either side of our farmhouse. 
So these pictures are for Deb. I walked around the house and took pictures through the windows.
Looking out the second floor window to the south.
                          The neighbor who rents the bins plowed that "road" in our 
                                        grass so he could get into the bins.
                   You can see where he piled up the snow on the left side of the picture.
Looking out of the front porch to the southwest.  
Looking out the upstairs spare bedroom window to the east.
                      That bump in the center of the far tree line is a mile away.
                                        That is Clifford's sky line!  
Looking out our North window from the second floor. 
The fenced in garden is 40' X 40' and the woods is 70 feet away.
Looking out the kitchen window to the South East.
Looking out the front porch door to the South West.
Looking out the second floor window to the south.  The pillow is for the cats.  They like to snooze in the sun, when there is sun.